Tag: Animated Film Scores

  • Animated Adventures Music for the Soul

    Animated Adventures Music for the Soul

    “Music is a moral law,” wrote Plato. “It gives soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination… and life to everything.”

    That includes computer-generated imagery.

    While my distaste for the overkill of CGI in alleged “live action” movies is quite well known, I have to concede that, when shelling out the clams for a big-budget movie, one stands a better chance these days of getting a quality ride if one banks on the solely computer-animated feature. Put an action hero in a computer-animated landscape, and everything looks incredibly fake. But integrate the characters, by creating them in the computer as well, and the result is often much more absorbing, imaginative, and even wittier than your run-of-the-mill Hollywood blockbuster.

    Furthermore, in a day when so many movies sport scores made up of droning electronics punctuated by colorless action cues, the computer-generated feature seems to attract composers who still understand how to write music.

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” we’ll listen to enlivening scores from four computer-generated films.

    We’ll hear selections from the first installment in the “Ice Age” franchise, by David Newman (son of Golden Age heavy-hitter Alfred Newman, brother of Thomas Newman, and cousin of Randy Newman).

    We’ll also have some of John Williams’ music from “The Adventures of Tintin,” after the comic book adventurer created by Belgian artist and writer Hergé. Tintin’s popularity in Europe failed to translate into big domestic box office, comparatively speaking, but the score is Williams’ best of its kind – an exciting adventure piece full of leitmotifs and great action cues – since the first of the Harry Potter films.

    We’ll round out the hour with two projects scored by Michael Giacchino for Pixar Animation Studios. Giacchino’s break-out success was the sly superhero satire, “The Incredibles,” for which he composed in the swinging ‘60s espionage style popularized by John Barry when writing for the James Bond films.

    We’ll also hear selections from Giacchino’s Academy Award-winning score to “Up.” “Up” was nominated for Best Picture at the 82nd Academy Awards, only the second animated feature ever to be included in the category.

    We can all use a little animation right now. I hope you’ll join me for an hour of music from computer-animated adventures, on “Picture Perfect,” this Friday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Incredibles & Animated Film Scores on Picture Perfect

    Incredibles & Animated Film Scores on Picture Perfect

    With Elastigirl and family heading back to theaters next week, I thought now would be as good a time as any to get back into the “swing.”

    On the next “Picture Perfect,” we’ll sample from music from “The Incredibles” (2004), alongside that for three other computer-animated features.

    Pixar’s sly superhero satire was composer Michael Giacchino’s first major feature and his break-out success. The now much-in-demand Jersey native has gone on to write music for the “Jurassic Park,” “Mission: Impossible,” “Planet of the Apes,” “Star Trek,” and “Star Wars” series. But arguably his most charming and lyrical work has been for the Disney-owned animation studio.

    For “The Incredibles,” director Brad Bird had originally hoped to enlist John Barry, who popularized the swinging espionage “sound” through his work on the James Bond films. When the veteran composer demurred, insisting he had moved on and had no interest in looking back, Giacchino was hired to out-Barry Barry.

    As a nice counterbalance, we’ll also hear selections from Giacchino’s Academy Award-winning score to Pixar’s poignant adventure “Up” (2009). “Up” was nominated for Best Picture at the 82nd Academy Awards, only the second animated feature ever to be included in that category.

    We’ll continue in the realm of computer animation with music from “Ice Age” (2002). The score was composed by David Newman, son of Golden Age heavy-hitter Alfred Newman, brother of Thomas Newman, and cousin of Randy Newman.

    We’ll also hear some of John Williams’ music for “The Adventures of Tintin” (2011), after the comic book adventurer created by the Belgian artist and writer Hergé. Tintin’s popularity in Europe failed to translate into big domestic box office, comparatively speaking, but the score is Williams’ best of its kind – an exciting adventure piece full of leitmotifs and great action cues – since the first Harry Potter film.

    In a day when so many films sport scores made up of droning electronics, punctuated by colorless action cues, the computer-generated feature seems to attract composers who still understand how to write music.

    I hope you’ll join me for an hour of “animated” scores this week, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, this Friday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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